Paul Clinton is a writer, curator and editor based in London, UK. He is a lecturer in curating at Goldsmiths, University of London.
From a short history of plagiarism to Trisha Brown's walk: what to read this weekend
Solidarity isn't for everyone
From the Women's Strike to a march that cancels itself out: what to read this weekend
From existentialist heartthrobs to the end of existence: what to read this weekend
From art under apartheid to a new novel from Walt Whitman: what to read this weekend
From Umberto Eco on fascism to Thomas Pynchon’s stand-in: what to read this weekend
From Alexander Kluge on poetry to Hannah Arendt on totalitarianism: what to read this weekend
From modern art as a torture technique to transgression in grime: what to read this weekend
From Sergei Eisenstein's erotica to ideas for a pneumatic parliament: what to read this weekend
From Frantz Fanon’s hidden humanism to medieval fan fiction: what to read this weekend.
From Anthony Burgess being bitchy to a primer for Xenofeminism: what to read this weekend
From Robert Walser's art criticism to 'microbial dark matter': what to read this weekend
From the perversity of suburbia to the politics of partying: what to read this weekend
From Beethoven's lesbianism to the precarious foundations of political philosophy: what to read this weekend
From the many unpublished obituaries of Fidel Castro to the architecture of Dubai: what to read about this weekend
From Carmen Herrera's taste for simplicity to a history of competitive eating: what to read this weekend
The second of three articles exploring art, class and precarity: an interview with writer and sociologist Didier Eribon
From the art of opacity to Joan Didion on race and the problem of good intentions: what to read this weekend
A selection of the best articles responding to the US election result
From an interview with Paul Beatty to the evolution of Midnight Spook Shows: what to read this weekend